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I want to hear all about the offensive wizardry of Calgary Flames prospect Johnny Gaudreau, but it turns out I dialed the wrong number.

Johnny Gaudreau’s number.

In case you haven’t heard, the 20-year-old left-winger has been basically unstoppable for the Boston College Eagles, collecting at least a point in a mind-boggling 29 consecutive games.

“I hear about (the streak), and I think what’s more important is how well we’re playing right now as a team,” Gaudreau said earlier this week, before he scored the Eagles lone goal in Saturday’s 2-1 overtime loss to Notre Dame.

“It’s not just me. Everyone is chipping in offensively and doing their part.”

Maybe so, but nobody is doing more than Gaudreau.

The Calgary club’s fourth-round pick from the 2011 NHL draft has only been held off the scoresheet once in 34 outings for the Eagles this season — and that was way back on Oct. 27.

He’s running away with the NCAA scoring crown with 30 goals and 34 assists so far for an average of 1.88 points per game.

His 29-game streak — he has 27 goals and 29 assists during that span — is only two games shy of the longest point-spree in Hockey East conference history, authored by Paul Kariya during his days at the University of Maine.

According to College Hockey Inc., Michigan State’s Tom Ross owns the NCAA record with a 78-game point streak from 1973-75, but the Flames will push Gaudreau to sign an entry-level contract this spring, long before he has a chance to threaten that mark and before he could become a free agent next summer.

Gaudreau knows his future is a hot topic on campus and in Cowtown, but he insists he has yet to decide whether he’ll return for his senior year at Boston College.

“I’ve just been focusing on this season here at BC and making sure that I’m staying on top of my school-work and just focusing on where I’m at right now, and that’s playing for the Eagles,” Gaudreau said. “At the end of the season, I’ll talk to my advisor and talk to my parents and family and see what the best decision is for me.”

Since he helped the Eagles win a national title as a freshman and should be a shoo-in to win the Hobey Baker Award this season, Gaudreau has little left to prove at the collegiate level.

And, although there are concerns about whether the 5-foot-8, 159-lb. dynamo can survive in the pro game, the Flames can hardly wait to get him to Calgary — or at least to the AHL’s Abbotsford Heat — to find out.

“We don’t want to put too much pressure on Johnny,” cautioned Craig Conroy, the Calgary club’s special assistant to the GM and currently Brian Burke’s right-hand man in the Flames’ hockey ops department.

“He’s done unbelievable, but it’s going to be a challenge. There’s going to be a big adjustment period. It’s not going to be as easy as, ‘OK, I’m coming in, and I’m going to be a dominant player in the NHL.’ It’s going to take some time, but I think that’s the thing — he’s willing to put the work in.”

And he’s willing even if he isn’t interested in taking the credit.

Interviewing Gaudreau is a bit like playing ping-pong.

His point totals jump off the stat-page, so the majority of the questions revolve around his offensive prowess.

Politely, Gaudreau will try to steer the conversation to his efforts to improve his defensive play, add muscle to his frame or even raise his GPA.

Pressed to talk about his exploits in the attacking zone, he’ll insist his linemates — fellow Flames prospect Bill Arnold, a broad-shouldered senior with points in 22 of the 29 games during Gaudreau’s streak, and Chicago Blackhawks first-rounder Kevin Hayes — are to thank for his success.

“I’m playing with two great players. I mean, it’s hard not to get a point every single game,” Gaudreau said. “I’m doing something wrong if I’m not getting a point playing every game with those two.”

In this case, Conroy doesn’t mind the pass-first mentality.

“When you let other people praise you and you want to turn around and praise the people that are around you, that’s a good sign for me,” Conroy said. “To have Johnny talk about his linemates, his teammates, his goaltender … I think Jarome (Iginla) used to do that a lot. Everyone wanted to talk about Jarome, and he would talk about himself a little bit, but mostly he wanted to talk about the team and everybody else.

“That’s a guy that I believe you can win with, because they’re putting the team ahead of themselves.”

The Eagles are certainly winning with Gaudreau.

The boys from Boston College have a 21-1-2 record when the pint-sized winger from Carneys Point, N.J., scores, and they own an 18-4-2 mark when he collects an assist.

Prior to Saturday’s overtime loss to Notre Dame, they were riding a 19-game unbeaten streak and had already clinched the top seed for the Hockey East Championship Tournament in two weeks.

The Eagles are also among the favourites to win the national crown, but that sort of success wouldn’t necessarily be great news for Flames fans.

The NCAA’s Frozen Four is scheduled for April 10-12 in Philadelphia. The final date on the NHL team’s regular-season schedule is an April 13 visit to Vancouver, so there’s no way Gaudreau — even if he’s ready to sign a professional pact — would make his NHL debut this spring if the Eagles advance to the national championship game.

While the team title won’t be handed out for another six weeks, Johnny Hockey should already have locked up the Hobey Baker Award, the hockey equivalent of the Heisman Trophy.

That honour has hardly been a guarantee of NHL stardom, but the list of past winners does include retired forwards Kariya, Chris Drury and Brendan Morrison — all south of 6-feet tall — and Ryan Miller, the star netminder who was traded Friday from the Buffalo Sabres to the St. Louis Blues.

Not that Gaudreau, who was one of a hat-trick of finalists for the Hobey Baker Award last season, is too worried about individual accolades.

“It would be very cool to win that,” Gaudreau said. “But my freshman year, I got to go to the Frozen Four, and it was with my team, and I got to see how special that was to be there with them. Last year, I had to go to the Frozen Four again, but it wasn’t with my team — it was for the Hobey Baker.

“This year, I kind of realized how difficult it was last year to be there without the guys. I want to make sure that we can all get out there to Philly and be playing rather than watching in the stands for me.”

I want to hear all about the offensive wizardry of Calgary Flames prospect Johnny Gaudreau, but it turns out I dialed the wrong number.

Johnny Gaudreau’s number.

In case you haven’t heard, the 20-year-old left-winger has been basically unstoppable for the Boston College Eagles, collecting at least a point in a mind-boggling 29 consecutive games.

“I hear about (the streak), and I think what’s more important is how well we’re playing right now as a team,” Gaudreau said earlier this week, before he scored the Eagles lone goal in Saturday’s 2-1 overtime loss to Notre Dame.

“It’s not just me. Everyone is chipping in offensively and doing their part.”

Maybe so, but nobody is doing more than Gaudreau.

The Calgary club’s fourth-round pick from the 2011 NHL draft has only been held off the scoresheet once in 34 outings for the Eagles this season — and that was way back on Oct. 27.